Grab a friend and tackle every achievement in *Split Fiction*! From hidden Easter eggs to tricky puzzles, this guide breaks it all down for you.
Goddess of Victory: Nikke teams up with Evangelion again, bringing new characters, a fresh storyline, and exclusive rewards. Don’t miss out on the action!
Spring has arrived in *Play Together*! A new update brings a heartfelt puppy quest, cherry blossom collectibles, and now—Mac players can join the fun on Steam!
Star Trek Online’s 33rd season, *Unveiled*, is here for PC, with consoles joining on March 11, 2025. New missions, fresh challenges, and big surprises await!
Celebrate a year of *Love and Deepspace* with the Nightly Rendezvous event! Unlock 5-star Memories, tackle challenges, and dive into fresh storylines.
Unlock all 26 *MiSide* achievements with ease! From quirky mini-games to hidden collectibles, this guide has you covered step by step.
Quill’s journey just got a fresh update! Both Moss and Moss: Book II are receiving stunning visual upgrades and smoother gameplay optimized for Meta Quest 3S. From improved textures to more precise motion tracking, these updates bring Polyarc’s beloved VR adventures to life like never before!
Celebrate the first anniversary of “Lies of P” with NEOWIZ and ROUND8 Studio’s stylish new merchandise line. Discover apparel and collectibles inspired
The Life of a Magical Circle is the first game from Solideo, a one-person indie game development studio looking to focus on more philosophical games. Their first title definitely doesn’t disappoint, taking the general aesthetics of Geometry Wars, with the frustrations of Getting Over It, dashing in a bit of roguelike and philosophy with dynamic music, narration and lots of intent. There is a lot to what is overall a rather simplistic game. There’s just a circle, it’s a bit hard to control and there are things that you don’t want to hit. There are some collectibles. There’s not a lot going on until things start to advance and the narrator starts to provide color to the world you’re playing within. Soon you’re trying to figure out what each collectable does and what you’re wanting to collect and not along with the true meaning behind the journey. Intentional Design Simple…
To save you time, if you define a scam to mean that you give someone money for a service and they do not do that service, then by all means WATA and VGA (Video Game Authority) are not scams. They’re legitimate companies that, if you ship your games to them, will grade your games and send them back based on what services you paid for. Maybe not very quickly, but they do what they promise to do. Now, is video game grading in of itself a scam? A fictional system designed to inflate the prices of retro video games that are becoming more scarce due to the fragile materials used to construct their boxes? That’s a deeper question with some actually quite odd answers. Furthermore, should you invest in graded games? That’s an even tougher question. We will dive into all of them below. If you’re wanting to collect retro…